Tom Brady put on a clinic on Monday night, making one of the NFL's vaunted defensive units look like a Pop Warner squad. In the 45-3 win over the Jets, the Patriots QB was 21 of 29 for 326 yards and four touchdowns, playing one of the easiest games of pitch-and-catch of his career.

Did it look like, at times, the Jets weren't even covering his receivers? Did it look like the Jets weren't close on many of them? I spent some of yesterday re-watching the game, with the goal of figuring out why it looked so flawless.

The result was this week's edition of Subject to Review.

The best thing Brady did, thanks in part to having plenty of time to throw, was find the best matchups. He used his head in making life easy for his receivers.

The most ridiculous was little Danny Woodhead vs. Jets DT Mike DeVito, who is 305 pounds. That led to a 35-yard completion. Brady also did not target Jets CB Darrelle Revis one time, while he was 3 of 5 for 49 yards and two TDs when he targeted Antonio Cromartie.

He consistently only threw it where it could be caught by his guy and no one else.

But my favorite stat is this one: Fifteen of Brady's 26 passes (not including batted passes or throwaways) targeted Jets defenders who are not among their top four defensive backs (Revis, Cromartie, Eric Smith and Brodney Pool.) So, he picked on the little guys.

"He’s smart, man,” said receiver Wes Welker, who had seven catches for 80 yards. “He knows what he’s doing out there. He sees everything and he finds good matchups and he goes with them.”

"It just worked out that way," O'Brien said. "We just had a pretty good beat on what the coverage might be at that time. As far as DeVito on Woody, I couldn’t sit here and tell you that we knew it was going to be DeVito on Woody. I’m not a magician. I just think it worked out really well as far as how the play was executed by our players."